Multimodal Prehabilitation Programs as a Bundle of Care in Gastrointestinal Cancer Surgery: A Systematic Review.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the impact of preoperative iron replacement as part of multimodal prehabilitation programs on preoperative fitness and postoperative outcomes in GI cancer surgery patients.
Results Summary
Five trials investigated the impact of preoperative iron replacement, but the abstract does not specify the outcomes for iron alone. The overall conclusion was that small studies support multimodal interventions, but data are insufficient to definitively assess their value.
Population
Patients undergoing GI cancer surgery.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
multimodal prehabilitation programs (exercise, nutritional supplementation, anxiety management) | increase | integration in GI cancer surgery as a bundle of care | patients before GI cancer surgery | - | small studies are supportive of | #1 |
exercise therapy | neutral | preoperative fitness and postoperative outcomes | patients before GI cancer surgery | - | impact of | #2 |
preoperative iron replacement | neutral | preoperative fitness and postoperative outcomes | patients before GI cancer surgery | - | impact of | #3 |
nutritional optimization | neutral | preoperative fitness and postoperative outcomes | patients before GI cancer surgery | - | impact of | #4 |
preoperative smoking cessation | neutral | preoperative fitness and postoperative outcomes | patients before GI cancer surgery | - | impact of | #5 |
BACKGROUND: Prehabilitation reflects a proactive process of preoperative optimization undertaken between cancer diagnosis and definitive surgical treatment, with the intent of improving physiological capacity to withstand the major insult of surgery. Prehabilitation before GI cancer surgery is currently not widely adopted, and most research has focused on unimodal interventions such as exercise therapy, nutritional supplementation, and hematinic optimization. A review of the existing literature was undertaken to investigate the impact of multimodal prehabilitation programs as a "bundle of care." DATA SOURCE: A systematic literature search was performed utilizing Medline, PubMed, Embase, Cinahl, Cochrane, and Google Scholar databases. STUDY SELECTION: The quality of studies was assessed by using the Cochrane tool for assessing risk of bias (randomized trials) and the Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment scale (cohort studies). INTERVENTION: Studies were chosen that involved pre-operative optimization of patients before GI cancer surgery. MAIN OUTCOMES: The primary outcome measured was the impact of prehabilitation programs on preoperative fitness and postoperative outcomes. RESULTS: Of the 544 studies identified, 20 were included in the qualitative analysis. Two trials investigated the impact of multimodal prehabilitation (exercise, nutritional supplementation, anxiety management). Trials exploring prehabilitation with unimodal interventions included impact of exercise therapy (7 trials), impact of preoperative iron replacement (5 trials), nutritional optimization (5 trials), and impact of preoperative smoking cessation (2 trials). Compliance within the identified studies was variable (range: 16%-100%). LIMITATIONS: There is a lack of adequately powered trials that utilize objective risk stratification and uniform end points. As such, a meta-analysis was not performed because of the heterogeneity in study design. CONCLUSION: Although small studies are supportive of multimodal interventions, there are insufficient data to make a conclusion about the integration of prehabilitation in GI cancer surgery as a bundle of care. Larger, prospective trials, utilizing uniform objective risk stratification and structured interventions, with predefined clinical and health economic end points, are required before definitive value can be assigned to prehabilitation programs.